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Showing posts with label susan derges. Show all posts
Showing posts with label susan derges. Show all posts

Tuesday, 10 November 2015

Sound, Word and Landscape: "All sound is memory; a repetition of an event that has already occurred"


Regular posts on Sound, Word and Landscape have been on this blog for the last few months. The day of talks took place on Saturday and it was wonderful: a mix of speakers, perspectives and approaches that combined to form something that was greater than the whole.

In the first section, Angus Carlyle talked about sound, memory and images in a talk that has really transformed the way I think about images, Beth and Thom Atkinson talked about the myths of the city and photographing what is and isn't there, while Max Houghton talked about the written word and landscape and how it defines what we see.

In the second session, Jem Southam talked about walking; long walks, short walks and how they affect our seeing and our being. Walking was also a major theme in Paul Gaffney's talk which also featured his latest work, Stray and how this became an immersive exhibition.

The final session featured Ester Vonplon's beautiful image and music film, Gletscherfahrt, and the idea of the earth as a living being, while the fantastic Susan Derges talked about her changing relationship to water and place and how photography expresses this.

The beautiful thing was in every talk you could see resonances of other speakers, so there was a communication across the day.

I was asked if I would write a review of the day and I said no, because well, I co-organised it with Max Houghton so it would be a bit biased.

But instead I had the delight of live-tweeting during the day (something I look forward to doing again in 2017 or 2018 maybe). So here, more or less, with the Samsung Swype typos corrected, are the live tweets of the day.


Angus Carlyle



"All sound is memory; a repetition of an event that has already occurred"

"Our ears have evolved from the bones and breathing tubes of reptiles and river creatures."

Angus Carlyle talked about different kinds of listening, and the different conventions they have. A whole list, including dirty listening.

Angus Carlyle referenced Michael Taussig: 'Writing is inadequate to the experience it records' And sound too.

Angus Carlyle: He spoke about the difference between word, image and sound memories.

Buy Angus Carlyle's In the Field: The Art of Field Recording here.

Buy Angus Carlyle's On Listening here.

Beth and Thom Atkinso

TA628-Cv2.jpg

They describe their book, Missing Buildings, as a book made by walking, about buildings that are no longer there

Thom Atkinson: "If the past is still in the present, how do you photograph that?"

Beth Atkinson: "We're really influenced by Thin places - where the gap between the physical and the spiritual world is thinnest."

Beth Atkinson: "You need some buildings remaining to be able to call it ruins. If all is destroyed, it's not ruins."

Beth Atkinson: She likens the lack of domestic ruins from the Blitz to a form of historical repression, referencing Rebecca Solnit

Beth Atkinson: "We can only understand what was lost through what remains."

Thom Atkinson: "The myth of the Blitz was formed through films, photography and family legend."

Thom Atkinson: "Joseph Campbell ( a mythologist) describes myth as being like a group dream."

Thom Atkinson: "Myth gets layered all the time. London is the symbolic focus for the Blitz  It's the landscape of the Blitz."

Thom Atkinson: "The Keep Calm and Carry On poster was never used in the second world war. It was seen as too patronising."

Thom Atkinson: "The myths of the Blitz are removed in contemporary news, sport and soap operas."

Buy Missing Buildings here.

Max Houghton



"Towns and cities grew out of the land, from the materials it is built out of and beyond."

"I find solace in nature writing. You don't need to go anywhere to read it. It's perfect!"

She talked about the contradictions and polarities in contemporary Britain and how the need to merge those polarities.

"In Walden there is a chapter on sound. On the birdsong  but also the railroads that disturbed Thoreau's peace."

Emerson: the true test of civilisation is to be found in the city.

She talked about WG Sebald and Solly Zuckerman and when language fails and image text succeeds.

"We can transmit images and sound but we  can't transmit touch or smell."

"Walking can be a pilgrimage, but in it has also brought us some of the greatest works of poetry, music and art."

She talked about Rebecca Solnit.  'The narrative or temporal element has made writing and walking resemble each other...'

Talked about Robert Macfarlane - Walking enables thinking and seeing

"Does something happen to our way of seeing when we lose ourselves in nature, landscape, walking?"

Read Max Houghton on 1,000 words here. 

Jem Southam



Liz Nicol's Rubber Bands

"Forty years ago I had a job, I had a flat, I had friends but I didn't have a photograph practice.. So I gave up my job, I gave up my flat and I gave up my friends. And I walked the length of the country. And I still didn't have a photographic practice."

He talked about Auerbach, painting and walking, and the connection between. walking to work, walking for work, walking to make work.

He talked about shadows Van Gogh's walker and the series of paintings Francis Bacon did off it. The walk can be an alter-ego

"Whenever I'm out walking I know I'm walking in land that people have been walking on for 800,000 years"

The simplicity of walking as exemplified by Robert Adams' Summer Nights. "You close the back door and you walk."

He talked about Liz Nicol's Rubber Bands - a series of cyanotypes featuring the rubber bands picked up on walks to her school

"I've done walks with David Chandler. He doesn't like the rockfall walks where rocks are crashing down."



He talked about Richard Gregory's cafe illusion. Based on a simple walk past a tile pattern on a St Michaels Hill cafe in Bristol. A pattern discovered by walking.

"What are we missing by not walking, by not doing those everyday short walks."

"I love using the iPad camera. It's a but like using a 10x8. You compose and you take a picture."

"When you photograph with a 10 x 8 camera you say I'm not going to photograph that, I'm not going to photograph that, I'm not going to photograph that..."

He talked about landscape, plant life, the passage of time and how that is contained in the image. And the joy of the ipad, Instagram and the ability to make small observations on life.

He photographed Conchie's Way. A road to nowhere built on Dartmoor by conscientious objectors during and after the First World War.



Jem Southam: Conchie's Way

Paul Gaffney 



"I seemed to be an expert at making life complicated for myself... that's why I started meditation"

 Paul Gaffney: "Long distance walking is like meditation. You slow down, you are stripped back to your body and your thought processes."

"I became very precious about the edit for We make the path. I wanted it to flow, so the images wouldn't jar."

"I was slowing down, waiting for the images to come rather than searching them out as part of a preconceived idea."

"The edit for the  book comes first and the edit for the exhibition comes after."

"The project was as much an excuse to go walking for five months as to make photography."

"The title We Make the Path by Walking came from Antonio Machado - 'there is no path, the path is made by walking.' "

The times he's let other people curate his work, it's been "a disaster."

His new book Stray started when he got lost in a pine forest and took high iso pictures to find his way out .

"The Belfast Exhibition of Stray was an experiment in how to communicate this idea of being immersed in a forest"

The exhibition developed from a series of pictures on the wall to eight projectors in a darkened room projecting the night images. Only one in four of the carousel slides was an image so it mirrored the darkness of the forest at night and the struggle to see.

Buy Stray here. 

Ester Vonplon




I didn't get to tweet about Ester. I was in conversation with her instead. It was a short session. She showed her Gletscherfahrt film and we talked about the sounds she recorded, the words that came with it, and the requiem that accompanies it. So there's sound, words, landscape and music. It's a beautiful piece of work. You can buy the book here - it comes with a white vinyl recording so you can recreate the slideshow in your own home.

Ester didn't talk about her other work. Which is a shame because it is brilliant. She doesn't think of herself as a landscape artist. Maybe because like all the rest of the people who talked on the day, she's more than that.

This is what some other people tweeted about her.

Seeing Ester Vonplon’s ‘Gletscherfahrt’ with the requiem composed to accompany it was the day’s great revelation.

Now battery is alive again I can say, Ester Vonplon's image & requiem piece was STUNNING. 4.00 a.m. words not enough

The most talented photographer of her generation? Ester Vonplon.


Buy Gletscherfahrt here.



 Susan Derges

Tide Pool 38, 2015

Susan Derges: from Tidepools

 "Most of the work we have seen today is  a form of biography."

"The accident of photography helped make the Observer and the Observed."

"Everything is always unfolding. It's either dying Orr coming into being. And your own reaction to it changes."

"There's a sense of self in Anna Atkin's cyanotypes."

 "You are always a participant in a photographic event because of the photographic choices you make."

"I could regard the river as a long piece of photographic paper or transparency."


"I couldn't explain why some pictures were coming out blue or dark"

"Then I built up a sense of the cycles of the moon and the effect of streetlights bouncing off the clouds."

"The tidepool pictures were made digitally; Ilfochrome stopped producing the paper and I became allergic to the chemicals."

"These tidepools are strongly related too my childhood memories."

See Tidepools at Purdy Hicks Gallery in London, opening 20th November

And then the kid's party started!

Thank you to all the speakers: Max Houghton, Beth and Thom Atkinson, Ester Vonplon, Angus Carlyle, Susan Derges, Paul Gaffney and Jem Southam.

 And from Max and me, a big thank you to ICVL, Photobook Bristol, the Southbank and RRB, as well as to all the volunteers who made it possible: Chris Hoare, John, Nathan Woodman, Hester Brodie, Scott Klang, Josie, Amak Mahmoodian, Onny Thomson, Alejandro Acin & Rudi Thoemmes (who made it possible in the first place).

And thank you to everyone who attended and for all the kind words and encouragement. You make the next one possible by coming!

Tuesday, 3 November 2015

This Saturday 7th November: Come and See - Sound, Word and Landscape


This is the schedule for Sound, Word and Landscape (my prejudice keeps on changing it to Word, Sound and Landscape) taking place in Bristol this Saturday November 7th. 
It's landscape but there's sound, music, word, biography, walking, geology, meditation, maps and bombs thrown in - so it's more about how you think about, make and show work. Landscape is not just landscape in other words.

Beth and Thom Atkinson will be second-launching their fabulous book, Missing Buildings, and Paul Gaffney will be launching his new book Stray. You'll be able to see, feel and smell a copy - and you'll be able to order one too. They're handmade so there's only 50 of them and they will go very fast. 
Tickets are £25 full price, £18 for students. You get a free £5 book voucher for spending at the bookshop on the day. And there is a fabulous buffet dinner (and it is fabulous) for £10 at the end of the talks (you need to book before for this). 

Sound, Word and Landscape Schedule
 12:00 – Doors Open
12:20 Introduction by Jesse Alexander

12:30 – 1:15 Angus Carlyle 
1:15 – 2:00 Beth and Thom Atkinson 
2:00 – 2:40 Max Houghton 


3:20 – 4:05 Jem Southam 
4:05 – 4:50 Paul Gaffney 


5:20  - 6:05 Ester Vonplon 
6:05 – 6:50 Susan Derges 



6:50 – 7:20 Panel Q and A: Jesse and  Max Chair:  Susan, Angus, Jem, Paul, Ester, Beth and Thom


8:00 Dinner

Sunday, 25 October 2015

Sound, Word and Landscape: How we think about, make and show pictures



Robert Adams famously described how the best landscape photography is a combination of the geographical, the autobiographical and the metaphorical.

Which covers the speakers at Word, Sound and Landscape on November 7th in Bristol.

But more than that, their covers how word, sound, music and a collaborative approach result in work that goes beneath the pretty and pastoral - and takes us to the heart of the places we walk, live and inhabit in different ways.

It's the idea that landscape photography needs to go beyond the visual to have any kind of depth. The same could be said of all kinds of photography, but it seems that landscape is leading the way in thinking how sight, touch, materiality, sound, smell, body and mind can all come together in the making and the showing of work.

Word, Sound and Landscape is about more than just the making of pictures. It's the whole process. On the day there are speakers who have at the heart of their work


  • the raison d'etre of why we make pictures
  • the linking between place and the making of images
  • the materiality of the image and how that connects to place and our self 
  • the physical linkage between  arriving at a place, being in a place and making in a place
  • how traces of history appear and change our understanding of the places we inhabit
  • how emotion connects to environment, and how sound and music link the two
  • how the exhibiting of work can take us into the places where we photograph




It's a day that touches on how we think about, make and exhibit photography. If you are remotely interested in land, in place, in photography or the world in which we live, you should be there.

Speakers include Beth and Thom Atkinson, Esther Vonplon, Max Houghton, Jem Southam, fPaul Gaffney, Angus Carlyle.

Sound, Word and Landscape: Beyond the Visual is at the SouthBank Club, Bristol

November 7th: 12:30 - 19:30 (a buffet dinner will follow at 20:00)

Wednesday, 7 October 2015

Lines, Paths and Lives Made by Walking




picture by Paul Gaffney


Paul Gaffney will be talking at  Sound, Word and Landscape: Beyond the Visual at the SouthBank Club, Bristol

November 7th: 12:00 - 19:00 

Buy Tickets here




Titles are important. They can say alot or they can say nothing. 

For me, the best-titled book of the last few years is Paul Gaffney's We Make the Path by Walking

It's a title that sucks you in. It's abstract but concrete, instantly comprehensible, an idea that we have all had but not quite followed through. And it's philosophical as well, in a very Buddhist kind of way. We make our lives by how we live them. We should live according to the right path, behaving towards others how we want them to behave to us, with charity and kindness, but with a backbone to stand up to injustice when we see it. We make the path by walking. Indeed.

And of course the title has a more basic meaning, which is even more profound. We understand the title through the lives we lead, the paths we walk, the world we live in. The path makes the world. You can see it written into fields, pastures and hillsides, in the lanes, roads and highways that we walk, ride, and drive along. 




A Line Made by Walking - by Richard Long, 1967


We Make the Path by Walking describes the world around us, how we see it, how we experience it, how we live it. It also describes the history of land art. In that geographical and biographical respect, it ties in with the work of Jem Southam and Susan Derges (also speaking in Bristol on November 7th). It's a title that is influenced by and personifies the work of Hamish Fulton or Richard Long (and you can see Richard Long's exhibition at the Arnolifini in Bristol till November 15th), it summarises the ideas of psychogeography and the basic ways in which we map the world. 

And then there's the pictures in the book. They were made during Gaffney's multiple hikes of the Camino de Santiago in Spain. But they are not so much monuments to the landmarks and people he met on the walks, as a meditation on how we interact with the land when we walk, how we forget the land by being part of it. 

It's meditation and it's pilgrimage and it's terribly effective. Gaffney is a photographer whose work is mystifying. People like it but they are never quite sure why. He's a photographer who articulates the ideas that we have all had, and does it with a depth that most people never reach. 

Paul Gaffney will be talking about these things in Bristol on November 7th. He will also be talking about his new work Stray. It's difficult to make a follow up book to work that is as strong as We Make the Path by Walking. But from the dummy, Stray looks like it will hit the spot. Is the book going to be ready for November? I hope so. 

Paul Gaffney will be talking at  Sound, Word and Landscape: Beyond the Visual at the SouthBank Club, Bristol

November 7th: 12:00 - 19:00 

Buy Tickets here



Monday, 28 September 2015

Susan Derges: Water, Life and Photography


 
 all images by Susan Derges

About a year ago I spoke to Susan Derges for an article for the RPS journal. It was fascinating to hear about experience, opportunity, chance and a singular appetite for experimentation led to a career path in which each project follows on from the other with common themes that are both personal and universal in nature, where water is a driving force both in Derges' life-history and the prints that she makes in very physical ways.


Susan Derges will be speaking at Beyond  Beyond the Visual: Music, Word and Landscape at the SouthBank Club, Bristol

November 7th: 12:00 - 19:00 

Buy Tickets here

This is what she said.


Susan Derges is best-known for her large scale photograms that combine simplicity with a reverence for the element in which they are made. An almost personal involvement with water has been a hallmark of her work, and the lush but minimal way in which she examines its actions on the world around us can be traced back both to her schooldays in rural Hampshire and the time she spent working in Japan in the early 1980s.

“I grew up in Fleet by the Basingstoke Canal and was very interested in what was going on in the waterway in all seasons,” she says. “It was a regular place of reference and it started in early childhood. I was mesmerised by it. You’d get barges go by and you’d get these wave patterns with interference or a duck would land and the droplets would ripple across each other. And in the seasons everything would change; shiny and still in summer, frozen in winter and moody and dripping in Autumn.”

The fascination with water was filtered through an organic minimalism that emerged from Derges’ experience of living in Japan in the early 1980s. “I  went to live in Japan for a period of five years,” she says. “And Japan reflected that fascination as well because water is venerated there; in the temples, in the gardens, even in modern office buildings you’ll go in and there will be a quiet place with a small pond of water where you can sit and contemplate. Japan is completely watery,” says Derges with a laugh.

After returning from Japan, Derges continued researching new ways to portray the physical world. “I was reading a lot about physics and the observer and the observed and was really interested in finding ways to visually articulate that. I was exploring the invisible world and appropriating things from early science.”

This curiosity with how to make the sensory and emotional visible has been a hallmark of her career. She has experimented with process, symbolism and the environment to create one of the most distinctive bodies of work in photography today. It’s a curiosity that has continued to this day. From environmentally based photograms to digitally produced constructed environments, Susan Derges’ work bridges the past and the present.

1. Observer and Observed no 6.



“I had a marvellous book from the 1950s called Soap Bubbles and the Forces that Mould them. It was a beautiful gem of a book and it had an experiment called musical fountains. You charged the fountains with a tuning fork and then lit it with a strobe light so it seemed as though the water wasn’t moving. I set this experiment up in my darkroom with a transducer, a jet of water and a frequency generator for the sound and it was amazing. You had these water droplets hanging in space and they looked so still, as though you could reach out and touch them, but of course if you did that your hand got wet because they weren’t still at all.”

Derges says she “…took lots of boring Harold Egerton like images…” and then her camera jammed. She went in front of the lens to unjam it, the film apparently ruined. “When I developed the film I was about to throw it away, but then I looked more closely and I thought, ah, there’s something going on here. Then I saw the information in the water droplets. They were like little fish eye lenses reflecting multiple images of me. So there was that Man Ray teardrop element and it started having connections with surrealism. It was a fortuitous accident but one that I was looking for.”


2. Full Circle





“When I was making the previous work I was in a flat in Notting Hill Gate using the flat as a studio and doing very science based work. But I moved to Devon in 1991 and suddenly found the landscape of Devon enormously rich. I saw this pond on Dartmoor and the sun was hitting this frogspawn and the shadow from the sun looked just like a photogram. I thought I can do that in the studio. So I did.”

3. River Bovey



“After that I got more interested in what I was looking at rather than how to represent it. I got interested in life cycles, the cycles of frogs and bees, and the processes of what was going on in the landscape.”
“I thought I could go outside at night with big sheets of paper and go into the place and be led by the place and the situation. That was what I experienced with the River Taw and Bovey. I wanted to get as close as possible to a process that is also our process. Our bodies, our mental processes work in a way that is very similar to what happens in a river. There are streams and flows and blockages, so I was dabbling in reading complexity and chaos and considering myself a participant rather than an author.”


4. Shorelines



“I was processing my own prints by the time I made Shoreline. These prints were made on the South Devon Coast around Sidmouth and Dawlish. I’d go there and wait for high tide and then let the waters flow over them. They were 3 ½  feet x 8 feet long and I got quite adept at reading the patterns of the water and the moon and the effect it would have on the paper.”

“There was such an investment in taking these big prints and you could lose so many prints in one night and end up with nothing if the waves went the wrong way. But I started to get headaches and eye strain from spending hours and hours in the dark room . It was physically taxing.”


5. Full Moon



“I had got very tired of being dictated to by a process but I got really interested in the moons, the clouds and the star fields so I started to do a lot of night photography of moons and star fields. Then I used an enlarger head on a rail to make a tracking device and put in the transparency of the moon or stars and projected that onto the Cibachrome in the tank with the leaves and branches laid on top of it.”





6. Canal Bridge


“That’s made with constructed silhouettes. It’s a reference back to growing up. It’s an imaginary place with the branches brought in. It’s a digital print made with a digital camera.”

“In a way it’s about death. There’s this symbol of crossing the river and there’s the symbol of the fading moon but I wasn’t thinking about these things when I made it. I made it just after my mother’s death and I had a strong sense of the transience of life. It refers back to my childhood and the canal I used to play at, but I’ll probably never go to that place again because the person associated with it is gone.”


Susan Derges will be speaking at Beyond  Beyond the Visual: Music, Word and Landscape 

at the SouthBank Club, Bristol

November 7th: 12:00 - 19:00 

Buy Tickets here

Wednesday, 8 July 2015

Thank you for Reading. Come to the Bristol Landscape Day in November


That's it for me for the blogging year. Thank you for reading.

I'll be back in September or October sometime. If you're in Sicily in September come to Gazebook Sicily. There's a beach and everything!

And if you're in the UK in November, don't forget to get your tickets for:

Beyond the Visual Landscape at the SouthBank Club, Bristol

November 7th: 12:00 - 19:30 tbc

Buy Tickets here

It's a  day of talks and screenings looking at how landscape, words, music and sound connect us to ourselves and the places we photograph. The rough outlines below give an idea of what people will talk about and speakers include Beth and Thom Atkinson, Angus Carlyle, Susan Derges, Paul Gaffney, Max Houghton, Jem Southam, and Ester Vonplon.

Beth and Thom Atkinson will be talking about the secret history of London as made apparent in their Missing Buildings project, an enigma where the visible is made Visible and layers of the past are suddenly revealed.



Angus Carlyle will talk about sound and landscape, and how the one affects our experience of the other, how sound cuts through time, how sound creates pressure, how sound ties to emotion, memory and landscape. The screenshot below is from a project on a wartime hiding place/cave in Okinawa.


From The Cave Mouth and The Giant Voice by Rupert Cox and Angus Carlyle

Susan Derges has a practice that has evolved with herself. She makes amazing photograms that connect water, personal history and landscape, but for this weekend she will talk about her newest work - all will be revealed on the day.


Shoreline by Susan Derges


Paul Gaffney will look at the evolution of his psycho-geographical, intuition based landscapes. He will also be showing new work from his latest book which continues the intuition-based tradition of We Make the Path by Walking but is also very different..



Max Houghton will talk about language, literature and landscape, and how our knowledge of language shapes our experience of the world around us.


Carpet-Mounds by Colin Pantall

Jem Southam's practice connects to the landscape through the very personal act of walking. He uses time to capture the shifts of nature at the most basic level. He will talk about his latest work and returning to a photographic practice based firmly around the fields, rivers, ponds and coastlines of the Southwest of England.


The Exe River by Jem southam

Ester Vonplon photographs a Switzerland denuded of its familiar lyricism. She will talk about her Gletscherfahrt project and the commissioned sound/music blend that makes it such a emotionally powerful piece.


From Gletscherfahrt by Ester Vonplon


Save the place (Bristol), the date (November 7th) and

Buy your tickets here.

Tuesday, 7 July 2015

Ester Vonplon:Ice Will Tear Us Apart


One of the most exciting things about photography is the different ways of telling stories that are emerging, the way that different ideas, emotions and senses are overlapping. And it's this overlap of images, ideas and senses that form the heart of a series of talks and screenings taking place in Bristol on November 7th (organised by Max Houghton of London College of Communication and myself).

Ester Vonplon will be there presenting and talking about her Glacier work. Susan Derges will talk about her water-based photograms, Jem Southam and Paul Gaffney will be looking at mind, landscape and walking, Angus Carlyle will talk about sound and landscape and how the one changes the other, and Max Houghton will talk about language and landscape, and how that affects our vision, experience and senses. There may be an addition here or there as well.

It's in Bristol, Saturday November 7th

Tickets are available here.

One of the people on the list who, in the UK at least, is less well-known, is Ester Vonplon. She's a Swiss photographer who made a book about the melting glaciers of Switzerland.

One of the interesting things about photobooks is when you get books that are great, but also go beyond the book form. Olivia Arthur's Stranger does that in a cinematic way, Ivars Gravlejs' Early Works does it by tying in to universal ideas of school and education, and Hidden Islam does it because it has such massive  political relevance.

With all these books, you get the feeling that there is more to the work than just the book. The book is not an end in itself, but is a key to something else that is bigger than the book.



That's also the feeling I get with Ester Vonplon's Gletscherfahrt. Ester Vonplon is a photographer who shows a deromanticised vision of Switzerland and Gletscherfahrt is a project where romance is tossed out of the window. It's an elegy of a book where the textures and touch of the landscape comes across in pictures that have a gut-churning poignancy.

The book shows Vonplon's pictures of glaciers in Switzerland. These are retreating glaciers, melting glaciers. To protect them from further shrinkage, they have been wrapped in giant white reflective sheets. That's what Vonplon photographs. But she photographs them dirty. This is snow that is filled with sediment, grit, particulates and ash. Everything is a bit smoke-stained and grubby. There is no purely driven snow here. And it's all shrouded in these godforsaken bits of cloth that start of pristine but gradually rip and decay grey into the melting ice of the glacier. It's disease and decay and mortality. The ice has torn them apart.

And that's just the pictures. The book comes with a record and the record plays a score that was specially composed for the work. You can play the record and look at the pictures and you instantly get the idea of what has been made and why it has been made.

But there is also a slideshow (and if there isn't yet. I'm guessing be some kind of installation). And that's where the music-picture overlap really strikes you in the belly. It's a composition filled with ripping, dripping, flowing sounds of mortality, a composition that combines the music of Stephan Eicher with the location recordings of Vonplon. She records the sound of melting glacier water (Gletschermilch or 'glacier milk' is the touching German word for it).

It is something so beautiful and yet so sad. It's chilling. But Vonplon has captured that in pictures and sound in a way that really needs no explanation. It's there in the pictures and the music and it's heartbreaking.




That combination of pictures and sound is just one way of extending the photograph beyond the purely visual. It works beautifully. But with landscape there are people working with landscape, with psychology, with meditation, with film and sound in ways that go beyond the visual to provide insights into what it really feels like to be in a place and of a place.


And that's what the November event will look at, how we can beneath the surface of the landscape, how sound and words and music and self connect into the places where we walk, where we live, where we breathe... and last, and most definitely least, where we photograph.


If you're lucky enough to be in Arles, See the slideshow at the Night of the Year.

See more of Ester Vonplon's work here. 

Buy the book here.

Tuesday, 12 May 2015

Slow Photography: Beyond the Visual Landscape




from Angus Carlyle: The Cave Mouth and the Giant Voice

So we've had slow TV, how about slow photography? Most photography is pretty slow, some of it by accident, and some of it quite intentionally.


    picture by Susan Derges

This November, together with Max Houghton and Jesse Alexander, I'm organising a day of events titled Beyond the Visual Landscape. It's a day of sound and word and image and how they all tie together, a day where we go beyond photography to understand what it is that makes a place look, sound and feel the way it does, and how we can use these ideas to represent the landscape and the way we walk, sense and remember it. It's a day of intentionally slow work taking place in a slow venue filled with slow loveliness.



picture by Paul Gaffney

The line-up is:

Angus Carlyle
Susan Derges
Paul Gaffney
Jem Southam 

Which is a great line-up (and we have additions to make) of thought provoking artists who put the psychological, emotional, biographical and physical at the heart of their work. So put the date in your diary. It's taking place at the Southbank Centre (the spiritual home of Photobook Bristol) on Saturday November 7th. Tickets will be available in July/August.



picture by Jem Southam